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SD and hex bought toddler door locks

Toastergirl's picture

Quick background: SD (age 11) and DD (2 and a half) share a room. It's not ideal, but we do not have a spare bedroom yet and since SD is only here every other weekend and the Monday night after the weekend we don't have, it made zero sense to have a toddler in our room while a bedroom sat empty.

SD has nothing but contempt for DD. Tonight on the phone SD told Dh that she and her mom bought toddler door handle locks for rooms so DD could not come into the bedroom they share. SD also added, "My mom knew you wouldn't get them, so she bought them."

Soooooo over this woman with no boundaries. SHE DOESN"T EVEN LIVE HERE!!! Who buys something for someone else's house??? Every week there's something new. I was livid when SD said that. Now when SD brings them over on Monday we are going to have to sit her down and tell her to return them.

This bothers me so much. My home is my home. I have boundaries in my home. And Hex just runs right over them.

Comments

sunshinex's picture

Wait... So BM bought SD toddler door handle locks so she can lock the door she sleeps in (your DDs room) on the weekends? I'm just making sure i'm reading this right... that's YOUR daughters room that you're so nicely allowing SD to sleep in on the weekends. SD does NOT live in your home. She can sleep on the couch from now on!

sunshinex's picture

Oh I would seriously have SD sleep on the couch or blow up mattress in the living room. I would make sure to let her know that it's incredibly rude to go ahead and try to lock someone out of their own bedroom. Remind her, that bedroom is NOT hers because she's only there on weekends. I wouldn't let this slide Smile

twoviewpoints's picture

Relax. BM can't make Dad actually use the locks. It's all for nothing. No, Dad won't be installing the locks.

I do understand SD11 wanting a bit of privacy from a 2 1/2yr old. But under the circumstances of limited space, separate bedrooms aren't currently possible. Little tot sisters can be pains in the rear even in nonstepfamily settings. However SD11 isn't the first eleven year old who has had to share a bedroom, nor will she be the last.

No, she gets no locks. Yes, BM is nuts to think just because she brought and sent them that the locks will be installed.

Just send the locks back to BM and tell SD you can no more lock DD out of a bedroom than you would lock SD out of the bedroom or make one of the girls sleep out in a tent in the yard. Like it or not they are sisters and there is limited space. Like sisters everywhere they have to share. It's just how it is.

On the otherhand, if there are some items in the shared bedroom that little ones might get into or be choke hazards , perhaps Dad could help by putting a high shelf or a linen closet in the hall could have a shelf for 'treasures'.

Sd might as well get over herself, DD isn't poofing.

Yogaguru's picture

Breathe and throw that shit away. Toss the damn locks and be done with it. Don't let BM know she got to you. I'd just throw them away and wouldn't address it, make excuses for it, or give BM an audience about it if she complains.

Rags's picture

Take them to GoodWill in the original packaging and take the tax write off. Make sure SD is along for that trip.

Don't forget the donation receipt. }:)

KittyKatMomma's picture

SD would lose any bedroom privileges and BM would have a nice package on her doorstep.
With a note "Thanks but no thanks"

It takes mighty big balls for SD to say DD isn't allowed in her own bedroom.
If that was my SD/DD I would simply remove the door.
Viola! Problem solved.

KittyKatMomma's picture

my sd15 is only here maybe 1-2nights a month-sometimes more sometimes less.
When we were living in the old rental house-DH was at work-I was home with the kids-she was 7/8 at the time.
My DD lives with me fulltime-so she had her own bedroom
My SD was here so rarely-however had her own bed/dresser

SD decided she didn't want my daughter in her own bedroom-she didn't want to share the space with ANYBODY.
And out of nowhere she was screaming at my child to get out-pushed my daughter (who was in a full leg cast because of a bone disease and is mentally delayed) onto her ass into the hallway and slammed the door shut.

Once I got DD calmed down-I kicked that bitch open-had my handy dandy screw driver and took the door down.
Put the door in the living room
Went back to the girls bedrooms-took all my SD's shit and bagged it up (she was on my DD's bed crying ignoring me)
tossed that shit into the basement

Stripped her bed=bagged that and tossed it into the basement.
And got in her face and told her next time I will call the police on her and have her taken out of my house.
I shut the lights off and walked out.

BM and DH were severely pissed off she did that....and BM was nice enough to offer to replace the door (I dented it) even though i refused to accept the money.

Back then BM and I got along quite well...but nowadays-this is the petty shit she would do.

KittyKatMomma's picture

Oh no not in my house....her mom's house sure
but BM lives in a trailer so her doors are somewhat paper thin
She's had to replaced SD's door 4/5x already

BM and SF are at their wits end at what to do...because ya know
it's not easy to figure out to REMOVE THE DAMN DOOR

"That's an invasion of her privacy!"

Sorry at 15 the only privacy she needs is when she's dressing/undressing.

ChiefGrownup's picture

Kitty kat you are my IDOL!

Last year I confiscated a sauce pan that SDthen16 was abusing (after trying normal methods first). The very next weekend BM shoves a bag into Dh's arms as she drove away and in it was a saucepan.

I was livid. I WISH I had your moxie. I was simply not smart enough to be the KittyKat!

Even so, SD was not allowed to use BM's saucepan. DH hid it somewhere; told SD "no" when she asked for it; gave it back to BM at the next dropoff.

She has also sent food. Always junk food. SD once proclaimed we only have "ingredients" at our house so her mom had to send the food. By "ingredients" she meant fresh produce, eggs, etc. Oh, and we have plenty of junk food here too. I guess the sight of a head of lettuce just traumatized her so much.

KittyKatMomma's picture

How the hell can you abuse a sauce pan?!
Why is Bm giving you guys crockery at all?

BM sends crapshit all the time
Mainly dollar store crap
We just throw it away

SD and DD pig on fresh fruits and veggies
they only drink water and fresh juice

Only SS gets to suffer without his crapshit

Toastergirl's picture

Easter weekend of 2016 we moved DD's crib into SD's room. So it's been almost a year.

Toastergirl's picture

It's just the plain and simple fact that she has to share. She sees it as her space that DD is intruding on (which I do understand). Meanwhile DD sees SD as someone who comes to her house every other weekend And intrudes onto her space. I sympathize with SD. I truly do. But the situation is what it is and cannot change. DD will fall asleep on the couch some nights SD is here (DD loves the couch). I do appreciate your comment, and agree it's how we react to the situation that matters.

Hex has been PASing SD since she was 5, and has been grooming her to not want to come here for years. I've already accepted that she will most likely PAS out. If it's not for the room situation, it will be something else. Trust me.

Maxwell09's picture

BM would try to send toys/snacks/beads home with SS but DH wouldn't let it go in the house. He'd walked it straight to our trash bin outside while she was still in the driveway. She was pissed about the toy and told DH, "he just wanted to play with you but don't worry his "babydaddy2" (her boyfriend then) will play with him instead;" but she never sent a toy again.

Take the locks and put them in your dumpers outside as soon as BM pulls up Do it in front of SD and BM so they'll both understand that THEY can waste their money buying whatever but it won't be in your household, and if you wanted some you would have bought your own. Your DH should tell his brat that she doesn't have a room-she is a guest and has no right to lock any doors in your house.

Toastergirl's picture

She's sent snacks before. SD would tell her we made her starve when in reality it was "if you don't eat what's on your plate, make yourself a sandwhich or go to your room." By not letting her eat junk, we were "starving" her.

Toastergirl's picture

Oh trust me, SD would put them on herself . I actually predict as soon as she gets home she will start installing them without telling us

Peridwen's picture

From what I read, there are two issues here. The first is that BM thinks she can dictate what happens in your home. That's an easy one - toss or sell the locks if they arrive at your home and tell SD "No". Alternatively DH can refuse to take the items from BM. Easy peasy. The second issue is one DH and I are dealing with as well, which is that siblings with a big age gap are sharing a room. I really think the best thing to do is sit SD down and say that she and DD have to share the room. The fact of life is that you don't have a large enough house for the two girls to each have their own bedrooms. BUT the next part is finding out what specifically is bothering SD so much. If it's just the fact that she has to share, SD will have to learn to get over it. But if it's things like DD getting into SD's stuff and breaking things accidentally or the baby toys in the room then you can come up with a solution that works for all of you. Think of it as a way to teach SD conflict resolution in a very practical way.

I'll give you an example of what we did in our house with the boys. SS10, BS4, and BS2 share a single 10x10 bedroom. We originally tried to put in an egress window in our basement to create another bedroom, but the city refused the permit since the property lines are too close to the house. So the only way for SS10 to get his own bedroom back would be for us to move. We sat down with SS10 and asked him what bothered him the most about sharing. He said there were three things: the young'ns steal his toys and sometimes break them, he has to clean up after the mess they make if he wants something he needs a clean room for, and he just plain is tired of sharing his room. He wanted to be able to close his door and keep his brothers out. DH & I said there isn't anything we can do about sharing a room at this point. However we acknowledged that his other two points were valid and offered solutions. DH & SS10 are going to build a locker for his toys, and the key to the locker will be hung way out of reach for the little ones. We offered to buy a locker now, but SS10 liked the idea of being able to customize it. For the moment we cleared out the top shelf of the closet exclusively for SS10's toys. And as for cleaning - BS4 is supposed to be cleaning up already, and BS2 is learning. DH & I told SS10 we will help in supervising bedroom clean up to make sure the little ones do their part instead of doing our own cleaning at that time.

It made SS10 feel better that his needs were acknowledged and that we agreed to help on things that were actually unfair. He's actually said that sharing the room doesn't bother him anymore. He'd still like to have his own, but he's happy with the new arrangement.

Toastergirl's picture

Thank you for your comment. It looks like DH needs to sit down and have a conversation with SD.

ChiefGrownup's picture

Peridwen came up with a great solution for making sharing peacable.

But I'd like to address the entirely different issue of BM sending hardware to your house. There are some great suggestions in this thread but I'd like to recommend do not engage with bm about it. Donate them or throw them out or leave them on the counter indefinitely or whatever but do not tell bm what you did. Just let her fail.

Since you know she's pasing and intrusive, she is also the type of person who will get a payoff from yanking your chain. She will use whatever you say or do to build more drama and more pas. So maintain radio silence.

As for your sd I would be tempted to straighten her out that every inch of "space" from the street to the back fence is yours and dh's, not hers. You have the power to use that space however you want. It does not sound like you are making her eat gruel in a cinder grate while the other child lives on velvet pillows and caviar. Plenty of families share rooms. It's normal.

At 11 I would have been obsessed with a 2 year old. Would have LOVED it. My 2 nieces were in their teens when my sister's third child was born -- they reacted the same way. It's a shame your sd can't just enjoy the baby.

But I do love Peri's plan for modeling positive conflict resolution to this kid who is getting way different modeling at the other house.

fakemommy's picture

I agree with this. We tell the kids, they don't have their own rooms, we have rooms that we let them use. They don't have their own clothes, we have clothes that we let them wear (same with toys, food, etc). We include clothes and toys because they complained when their stuff was passed down to younger siblings.

Acratopotes's picture

Toaster - after no consideration and thought here's my comment..

Whip DH's ass for not calling BM and telling her to butt out of his home, she has no say what so ever about who sleeps where and if she keeps up poisoning SD there will be some serious hell coming her way.
1. No more CS so that he can afford a bigger place and SD has her own room,
2. Stay the eff out of my house and my rules, you do not belong there.

I do not see this as an SD problem, I see this as an DH problem for not telling BM to eff off... he accepts all off this through the years, it's time for some serious boundaries with that woman and teach SD some sharing manners.